
Siemens Chief Says a 'Billion' People Need to Stop Eating Meat
Ah, freedom: The all-encompassing ethos of the universe that each and every human being is chasing at all times, whether we’re fully aware of it or not.
We are, as the first sentient beings in the existence that we exist in, the first to understand what it means to be free. To have the liberty to be who we are. Sure, there are some guardrails out there to protect us from the perverse among us, but in much of the civilized world those guardrails are reasonable.
But, as more wealth and more power pours into the hands of the global elite, those guardrails begin to encroach on us, like the old gag from the movies where the hero is trapped in a room where the walls begins to close in around them.
Soon, these walls will begin affecting our liberty to do the things we love, and may even begin to affect what we are “allowed” to eat.
One billion people should stop eating meat in order to save the climate, the chairman of the largest industrial manufacturing company in Europe told a panel at the World Economic Forum.
Danish businessman and chairman of the German manufacturing giant Siemens, Jim Hagemann Snabe pushed the Great Reset agenda of replacing meat with synthetic proteins at a “Mobilizing for Climate” panel at the annual globalist meeting in Davos, Switzerland on Wednesday.
“If a billion people stop eating meat, I tell you, it has a big impact. Not only does it have a big impact on the current food system, but it will also inspire innovation of food systems,” Snabe said, adding: “I predict we will have proteins not coming from meat in the future, they will probably taste even better.”
Snabe claimed there was a “need” for such a change.
“They will be zero carbon and much healthier than the kind of food we eat today, that is the mission we need to get on,” the Siemens boss continued.
The anti-meat movement has been spreading, particularly in the western world, despite some varying scientific theories on precisely what sort of impact such a switch would have.